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Obituary

Nicos Remoundos, founding member of Xekinima, CWI Greece

Socialist fighter against the military junta and capitalism

(September 2010)


From CWI Website, 5 September 2010.
Transcribed by Iain Dalton.
Marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL).



Xekinima Reporters (CWI Greece)

On the afternoon of Tuesday, 4 September, Comrade Nicos Remoundos, founding member of Xekinima (CWI Greece), and its General Secretary until the late 1980’s, passed away at the age of 71. On Friday, 7 September, Xekinima comrades organized an excellent political funeral for Nicos Remoundos, with chants, revolutionary songs, red flags and speeches by friends and comrades. Among the speakers were Peter Taaffe, General Secretary of the Socialist Party (CWI in England and Wales) and also representing the International Secretariat of the CWI. Peter first met Nicos in 1974 during the period of the overthrow of the military dictatorship in Greece. Nicos and other comrades subsequently joined the CWI. As well as Peter, other speakers at the funeral included Doros Michael, from the Cyprus section of the CWI, and other old comrades from the 1970’s, and Andros Payiatsos, General Secretary of Xekinima.

Nicos’s coffin was draped by a huge CWI flag as it was lowered into the ground, while his comrades and friends sung the Internationale. When the coffin was finally lowered, the call, “Comrade Nicos Remoundos – Present!” was made by members of Xekinima and echoed throughout the First Cemetery of Athens.

The following short obituary appeared in the last issue of the Xekinima newspaper and on the website of the Greek section of the CWI the day after Nicos’ death. Much more commentary and videos of the funeral of Nicos can be seen here.




Nicos, our comrade, our friend, our brother, is no longer among us. He lost the battle against his ill health and particularly from Parkinson’s Disease from which Nicos suffered during the course of the last decade. Although we all were aware of his health problems, Niko’s death was a shock to all of us who knew him. Nicos was a fighter and until his last moments had a vivid interest in political developments, the struggles of the working class and the activities of our organization.

Nicos will always be with us. This is not just a figure of speech. Nicos’ contribution to the development of Xekinima has been historic. In the course of the 1970s Nicos had a crucial role in Xekinima’s first steps. As its General Secretary, until the late 1980’s, Nicos played a major role in laying the foundations that allowed Xekinima to be one of the most sizeable and important organizations of the revolutionary socialist left in Greece today.

Nicos started his political contribution in the period of the Greek military junta, playing a leading role in a small, clandestine group, fighting against the military dictatorship, called the ‘Workers’ Group’. This group, which took part in the revolutionary revolt at Athens Polytechnic in 1973, a prelude to the collapse of the Junta in 1974, searched for the ideas and methods required by the Left to answer the dead end of capitalism and imperialism, based, among other things, on the experiences of the 1960’s. Thus, rejecting the barbaric one-party dictatorships of the Stalinist regimes in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, and having lived through the betrayals of the Stalinist Communist Party of Greece, Nicos and his group moved towards the ideas of Leon Trotsky.

Nicos was always part of the mass working class movement and strong opponent of any kind of sectarianism. Because of that he decided, along with his small group of comrades, to participate in PASOK from its inception in 1974. PASOK (The Panhellenic Socialist Movement) was, at that time, a party with a working class base and a radical left platform.

The newspaper Xekinima was founded one year later, in 1975, and developed as a left opposition against the bureaucratic leadership of the PASOK party and its policies. Soon after its foundation, Xekinima played a key role in the creation of the ‘Horizontal Connection’, a network of rank and file workers, party branches and activists, in favor of a revolutionary socialist programme for PASOK and for real party democracy. Because of this call, Xekinima was expelled shortly afterwards from PASOK.

The years that followed were difficult. Xekinima was to a large extent isolated in a very small group. People’s huge illusions in the populist PASOK leader, Andreas Papandreou, and the Stalinist politics of KKE (Greek communist party) allowed very little room for efforts to build a strong base for the revolutionary Left. The space for the left parties and organizations seemed to be entirely covered by the huge illusions in social democray and Stalinism. During this time, Xekinima was struggling to clarify its political, ideological and organizational methods – a process whereby the Committee for a Workers’ International (CWI), in which Xekinima participated, played a key role.
 

Deeply internationalist

After the fall of the military dictatorship in 1974, Nicos and his group had their first contacts with CWI. For Nicos, internationalism was not just a “good idea” or to follow what was happening around the world. Nicos’s internationalism reflected his keen understanding of the necessity for co-ordinated struggles with revolutionary socialists of other countries, based on the common organization of an international revolutionary party. This was the legacy of revolutionaries over the last two centuries and Nicos followed in their footsteps. Nicos was deeply internationalist and his internationalism characterized every aspect of his political intervention. He remained a loyal supporter of the CWI, following its steps forward and its development with extreme interest until his last days.

At the beginning of the 1990s, Xekinima came to a turning point. PASOK had fully transformed into a party of the establishment and big capital and the collapse of the Soviet Union caused a tremendous crisis in the Left worldwide. This made it necessary to re-evaluate revolutionary tactics. Nicos supported the tactical changes of the CWI and stood by the new generation of fighters who struggled to put them into practice.

During the last decade, Xekinima was able to become one of the better known and sizeable organizations of the revolutionary Left in Greece. This achievement is also a vindication of Nicos’ political efforts.

Xekinima will always honour Nicos’ political contribution to the building of revolutionary Left in Greece. Besides that, we will remember Nicos for two additional reasons. The first was his deep connection and loyalty to the working class and his strong belief in its ability to emancipate itself. The second was Nicos’s genuine humanism and closeness to his friends and comrades. Nicos would always assist in any way he could other comrades who were in need. That was part of his humanism. For Nicos, socialism was not only a correct social, political and economical model but also a way of life, to the extent that the capitalist system, of course, allows.

Nicos we will miss you! But we will always remember you and honour you!


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